I was partly tongue-in-cheek when I said in a previous post that Microsoft, sometime in the future, will convert to using Linux as its base OS.
That future is now!
https://www.zdnet.com/article/linux-...minates-azure/
LOL! I guess Linux isn't a cancer any more!
BUT, don't be misled. These are Linux VM's running on WIndows. For the best safety and performance it should be the other way around. When folks run those VMs and realize that they don't have to use a VM, they can get their favorite Linux VM for free and install it to hardware, then it will be "Abandon Ship" for windows users. In the process they'll save the money they would have spent for Windows, Word, Office, etc... They'll save hundreds of dollars.
That future is now!
https://www.zdnet.com/article/linux-...minates-azure/
Today, Scott Guthrie, Microsoft's executive vice president of the cloud and enterprise group, said in an interview, "Slightly over half of Azure VMs are Linux.
That's right. Microsoft's prize cloud, Linux, not Windows Server, is now the most popular operating system. Windows Server isn't going to be making a come back.
"Every month, Linux goes up," Guthrie said.
And it's not just Azure users who are turning to Linux.
"Native Azure services are often running on Linux," Guthrie added. "Microsoft is building more of these services. For example, Azure's Software Defined Network (SDN) is based on Linux."
It's not just on Azure that Microsoft is embracing Linux. "Look at our simultaneous release of SQL Server on Linux. All of our projects now run on Linux," Guthrie said.
That's right. Microsoft's prize cloud, Linux, not Windows Server, is now the most popular operating system. Windows Server isn't going to be making a come back.
"Every month, Linux goes up," Guthrie said.
And it's not just Azure users who are turning to Linux.
"Native Azure services are often running on Linux," Guthrie added. "Microsoft is building more of these services. For example, Azure's Software Defined Network (SDN) is based on Linux."
It's not just on Azure that Microsoft is embracing Linux. "Look at our simultaneous release of SQL Server on Linux. All of our projects now run on Linux," Guthrie said.
BUT, don't be misled. These are Linux VM's running on WIndows. For the best safety and performance it should be the other way around. When folks run those VMs and realize that they don't have to use a VM, they can get their favorite Linux VM for free and install it to hardware, then it will be "Abandon Ship" for windows users. In the process they'll save the money they would have spent for Windows, Word, Office, etc... They'll save hundreds of dollars.
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